When college age kids socially get the approval of parents

Posted By on February 20, 2012

As I’ve mentioned before, one of the primary reasons I don’t post or visit my Facebook account very often is because it is the domain of my makesadadproudkids and their friends. I’m sure I would not have wanted a nosy parent watching everything I said and did … so I didn’t focus on it as a parent; I gave them both privacy.

That said, there are things I know have been posted that I don’t approve of … just as I’m sure there would have been in my day if social networking existed.  BUT … today I noticed something positive (my opinion), as Taylor has both the masthead (sailing with Taylor last spring on Encore) and the Gipper as an avatar. It sure is nice to be able to nod in approval … and to secretly even pat myself on the back!

Just archiving a doodle while holding on the phone

Posted By on February 20, 2012

Who doesn’t spend their time on hold doodling whatever is on their mind?

doodles_davit

Today I found myself contemplating Mark’s comments this weekend regarding forgoing the Kingston davits I posted on the other day and considering a custom  for Encore and our existing Zodiac … as well as the eventual AB inflatable. I started to think (dangerous), “this might be do-able.” I’m not sure it is “self do-able,” but a contact over at Thompson is pulling me a couple scraps of 1-1/2” –304 Stainless Steel tubing so I can test my old TIG welding skills … although I’ve never welded stainless steel. I now have an excuse to head down to the boat in order to pull a few measurements  and see if I can work up a real drawing. Yikes … too many projects, not enough time.

VW will start selling Golf plug-in hybrid in 2015

Posted By on February 19, 2012

There must be a reason automakers are not pairing hybrids or plug-in electric vehicles with diesel engines … for the life of me I can’t figure it out. The coupling on paper seems to be a perfect combination … especially for a company like e GM with the “Volt” type of EV/Hybrid technology.

Volkswagen will start selling a plug-in hybrid-electric (PHEV) version of the Golf in 2015 and has estimated that the car will be able to go as far as 30 miles in electric-only mode, AutoExpress is reporting.

The Golf PHEV will likely pair a 1.4-liter turbocharged gas engine with a 107-horsepower electric motor. The German automaker will show off a Golf PHEV concept vehicle at the Paris Motor Show this September, the website reported. PlugInCars cites a review on the UK-based AutoExpress website saying that the prototype was “very impressive” in a test drive.

Posted via email from RichC’s posterous

Even thinking about sailboat projects is getting costly

Posted By on February 19, 2012

kingstondavitsAfter trying a few do-it-yourself repairs on our old Zodiac, I gave up last week and took it to Gator at Lifeline Marine. He did the same soap check and visual inspection with me there, but couldn’t find the air leak either … although he did comment on the aging fabric, sun damage and many scuffs and small cuts (nothing leaking though). So I decided to leave it with him and paid inspection and approved a limited amount for repair … probably the same cost as if he would have found it on the spot.

Anyway the dinghy situation has me planning ahead and looking at a few option … all of which are going to require a davit or custom built arch. I’m inching away from the custom designed with a welded up arch to support a heavier RIB and leaning toward a set of lighter duty davits so I can keep the Cape Horn self-steering gear (davits top right/steering gear in center below). 

encore_tarponsprings

If I go the davit route, the structure can’t be used to support additional solar panels or a wind generator, but will free up a few dollars for an aluminum bottom deep vee AB inflatable. Most sailors say that they are the premium and preferred inflatable as they offer a drier ride and bounce around less in a chop. They are lighter weight for both pulling up on a beach or hoisting in the above davits. The disadvantage is that they can’t easily be field repaired as with fiberglass. One of my final thoughts is that the lighter 9 or 9’6” models can be powered with my existing outboard of modest horsepower and lighter weight. Compromises, compromises …

I’ve email good friend who I’m sure will have an opinion … very appreciated as well. He now works in the marine industry and has a lifetime of sailing experience (and circumnavigation under his keel); I value his advice – thanks ahead of time Mark!

My early voting Super Tuesday primary ballot has arrived

Posted By on February 18, 2012

voteearlyvoteoftenposterNot knowing my travel schedule when it comes to voting on Super Tuesday, March 6th … I’ve opted for an absentee ballot this year. With Rick Santorum polling strong in Michigan and nationally, it looks like our Ohio primary election vote might be more important than usual this year? I didn’t give it too much thought after their dropping out, but  Jon Huntsman and Rick Perry are still on the ballot (below)… as is Newt Gingrich (oh … just kidding).
Winking smile 

whosontheballot_ohbutler120

Tech Friday – about.me … adding yet another landing page

Posted By on February 17, 2012

As the years go by I find myself forgetting which of the links and information sites I’ve signed up for … and I’m probably not alone. Anyway, if you are online at all, it might be helpful to have a personal landing page, especially if you’re not interested in your own URL and web server (example: richcorbett.us). After setting up free account at about.me … I thought it might be a helpful suggestion for someone else?

aboutmerichcorbett

With a few quick buttons and the addition of a personalize background, it was pretty easy to have a customized landing page along with an additional email address if you want one. The button setup tools makes adding Twitter, Google Plus, Facebook, etc. simple and adding a personal link or two along with the private email button equally as easy with just a click.

So if you need a landing site to consolidate different pages (or just want to secure your name), give about.me a try … by the way, if you haven’t figured it out, mine is about.me/richcorbett

Time to wake up with the world’s largest rope swing

Posted By on February 17, 2012

Pinterest – is it worth using another social kind of site?

Posted By on February 16, 2012

How much is too much social networking … and how will they all make money?

Traffic to the website—which lets users create online scrapbooks to share images of projects or coveted products—has grown tenfold over the past six months. In January, the number of visitors on Pinterest.com was almost a third of that on Twitter.com.

Posted via email from RichC’s posterous

Nickel and dime style increases continue at Sprint

Posted By on February 16, 2012

Although I’ve stayed with Sprint for mobile service for over a decade, I’m constantly irritated with their tweaking. sprintlogoJust when I was starting to calm down from the last couple go-arounds over a discount structure and then AirRave billing, the monthly invoice increased again. Not by much mind you, but enough to increase my bill each month (quite a bit if you multiple it by 12 months).

Once again I jumped on the phone and worked my way through their billing phone tree in order to talk with a representative who could explain — Paraphrased: “Sprint has changed the way they apply the corporate discounts on the shared minutes service plan. We will only be applying the discount to "one” phone and the second share phone line (which was free) will be billed at the regular additional phone rate.”

Has natural gas hit a bottom. If so, how to invest?

Posted By on February 15, 2012

Besides trading in an out of the depressed Natural Gas market in the past month, I’ve been pondering how to “eventually” capitalize on what I see as a bottom in the commodity price for NG and a possible upside down the road. How far down the road, who knows?

ngh2_120215

 

I’ve been doing some reading regarding different ways to profit on future demand. First, the new “fracking” drilling method now makes it possible to extract more gas from the same wells. This increases the amount of natural gas and decreasing the cost … so that will need to be calculated into the producer picture. There are companies strategically positioned to capitalized in hydraulic fracking – I’ve added a small position in Heckmann Corp (HEK).

Another piece of advice that I’ve picked up is to stick with companies that make money from moving natural gas … pipelines. One of the pluses to investing in companies like Spectra Energy, El Paso Pipeline Partners and Williams Partners LP; Williams owns nearly 14,000 miles of pipelines and charge a fee for every cubic foot of natural gas they move through their pipes. Supplies don’t matter as these companies make money whether NG is cheap or expensive … and at a time when the U.S. is moving towards clean natural gas as an alternative to coal for electric power plants and as diesel replacement in trucking, they should do do well. Another option rather than individual companies is to invest in an exchange traded note like JPMorgan Alerian MLP Index (AMJ). AMJ yields 4.83% but charges 85 cents for every $100 invested … so beware of the costs associated with buying ETNs.

I’m not comfortable investing in the drillers and those companies that are drilling new wells yet, as these companies are dealing with such low NG prices that there is little incentive to keep their rigs drilling. They are also battling the environmentalist who have targeted the process of injecting water and chemicals in the underground cracks and have suggested that this method is contaminating drinking water and creating earthquakes.

Another option is to look for companies that benefit from the lower natural gas prices. These are companies that use NG in their products such as chemical, plastic and fertilizer companies. A couple of the big boys are Dow Chemical (DOW) and DuPont (DD) (which I mentioned in December 2011).

Dow Chemical Co, for instance, depends on natural gas to manufacture plastics used in everything from toys to artificial turf to diapers. The company is expanding its capacity in the United States to produce ethylene, a key plastics component that is derived from natural gas.

Dow Chemical may be something of a momentum play. It is up 14.6 percent so far in January, and trades at a P/E of 13.5. It yields 3 percent.

Companies like DuPont, meanwhile, will likely see costs for producing fertilizer, plastics and other products decrease, said Doyle from Morris Capital Advisers. Natural gas is a component of ammonia, which is used in fertilizer production.

That will likely help them both at home and overseas. Demand for fertilizer alone, part of the $700 billion chemical industry, is expected to grow by 3 percent worldwide in 2012, according to the International Fertilizer Industry. The chemical industry is one of the top U.S. exporters, according to Zacks Investment Research.

DuPont is up 14 percent this month. It trades at a P/E of 13.4 and yields 3.3 percent.

LINK

Natural Gas ETFs:

Natural gas price tracking exchange traded funds is another way to make money if there is a rise in the price for natural gas. The downside is that if gas continues to head south (possible but the move has been significant already) or that it will trade in the current range for years to come. I’m of the school that natural gas is near a low and although I’ve never been accurate at “picking a bottom,” I do think that the downside risk is lower than the upside.

* LINK to article warning about UNG

UNG is forced to continuously sell the front month and buy the forward month. This is a problem because of the contango in the natural gas market. Below are the prices for Henry Hub Natural Gas futures over the next year.

  • Jan 2012- $ 3.12
  • Feb 2012- $ 3.17
  • Mar 2012- $ 3.20
  • Aprl 2012- $ 3.26
  • May 2012- $ 3.31
  • Jun 2012- $ 3.35
  • Jul 2012- $ 3.41
  • Aug 2012- $ 3.44
  • Sep 2012- $ 3.45
  • Oct 2012- $ 3.47
  • Nov 2012- $ 3.88
  • Dec 2012- $ 4.03

As you can see, prices for natural gas are higher in each month that is "further out" on the futures curve. This means that UNG loses the difference between each month. So, if natural gas prices remain flat and end December 2012 at 4.03 UNG will lose the enormous 89cent spread between Jan and Dec natural gas.

The natural gas stocks are a much better way to play natural gas itself than UNG. Companies that hold natural gas underground will receive higher prices going forward. These stocks include Chesapeake Energy (CHK), Southwestern Energy (SWN), Anadarco (APC), Sandridge (SD), and other smaller natural gas companies. Major integrated oil companies such as Exxon Mobil (XOM), and Conoco Phillips (COP) also have major natural gas holdings. These should benefit from any upside in natural gas. The (FCG) is another way to play it, this ETF owns a group of natural gas stocks. Investors looking for more risk could consider Cheniere (LNG), Cheniere is hoping to export natural gas from America to foreign nations where gas prices are much higher.

Conclusion: Investors who believe in natural gas should be buying the natural gas companies, not UNG.

Desultory - des-uhl-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee

  1. lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
  2. digressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random: a desultory remark.
My Desultory Blog